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- Title
On the nature and significance of rarity in mineralogy.
- Authors
HAZEN, ROBERT M.; AUSUBEL, JESSE H.
- Abstract
More than half of the >5000 approved mineral species are known from five or fewer localities and thus are rare. Mineralogical rarity arises from different circumstances, but all rare mineral species conform to one or more of four criteria: (1) P-T-X range: minerals that form only under highly restricted conditions in pressure-temperature-composition space; (2) Planetary constraints: minerals that incorporate essential elements that are rare or that form at extreme conditions that seldom occur in Earth's near-surface environment; (3) Ephemeral phases: minerals that rapidly break down under ambient conditions; and (4) Collection biases: phases that are difficult to recognize because they lack crystal faces or are microscopic, or minerals that arise in lithological contexts that are difficult to access. Minerals that conform to criterion 1, 2, or 3 are inherently rare, whereas those matching criterion 4 may be much more common than represented by reported occurrences. Rare minerals, though playing minimal roles in Earth's bulk properties and dynamics, are nevertheless of significance for varied reasons. Uncommon minerals are key to understanding the diversity and disparity of Earth's mineralogical environments, for example in the prediction of as yet undescribed minerals. Novel minerals often point to extreme compositional regimes that can arise in Earth's shallow crust and they are thus critical to understanding Earth as a complex evolving system. Many rare minerals have unique crystal structures or reveal the crystal chemical plasticity of well-known structures, as dramatically illustrated by the minerals of boron. Uncommon minerals may have played essential roles in life's origins; conversely, many rare minerals arise only as a consequence, whether direct or indirect, of biological processes. The distribution of rare minerals may thus be a robust biosignature, while these phases individually and collectively exemplify the co-evolution of the geosphere and biosphere. Finally, mineralogical rarities, as with novelty in other natural domains, are inherently fascinating.
- Subjects
MINERALOGICAL research; CRUST of the earth; CRYSTAL orientation; PRESSURE; TEMPERATURE
- Publication
American Mineralogist, 2016, Vol 101, Issue 6, p1245
- ISSN
0003-004X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2138/am-2016-5601CCBY